GENTIAN FAMILY. Gentianaceae. 



A not very uncommon wild flower in 



Lance-leaved , . . . , . XT 



Sabbatia swamps of the pine barrens or New 



Sabbatia Jersey, with white, starlike, five-lobed 



lanceolata flowers, nearly an inch broad, which in 



white fading turn yellowish, and ovate or lance- 



June-Septer i- shaped Hght green leaves with 3 _ 5 ribs 



The plant-stem slender, somewhat four- 

 sided, branched above, or sometimes simple. The 

 branches are borne relatively opposite. The flowers are 

 numerous. 1-3 feet high. Pine barrens N. J.,to Fla. 

 Rose Pink The stem of this species is decidedly and 



Sabbatia sharply four-sided, it is also rather thick 



tmgularis an( j much branched. The light gi'een 



J^-Au' us" k leaves are five-ribbed, ovate, acute at the 

 tip, and somewhat clasping at the base. 

 The delicately fragrant flowers are an inch or more 

 broad, pale crimson-pink or sometimes white, and 

 marked in the centre with a yellow-green star (a charac- 

 teristic of many of the Sabbatias). The style is cleft at 

 the tip i. e., two stigmas. The calyx-lobes are about 

 one third as long as the corolla. 2-3 feet high. Fertile 

 ground, N. Y. and Pa., west to Mich., and south. 

 Sea Pink ^ P re ^y species common on salt mead- 



Sabbatia ows, with crimson-pink flowers as large 



stellaris as or larger than a nickel. The light 



Plnk green leaves oblong lance-shaped or lin- 



ear, the uppermost small and bractlike. 

 The numerous flowers are borne solitary at the ends of 

 the branches ; the linear calyx-lobes almost equal (the 

 rule is flexible) in length the lobes of the pale crimson- 

 pink or white corolla. More than half the style is two- 

 cleft, the stamens are golden yellow, and the centre of 

 the flower is green-yellow edged with ochre or some- 

 times red. 6-20 inches. Along the coast from Me. to 

 Fla. Closely allied to the next into which it appears to 

 pass. 



Like the preceding. The stem exceed- 

 gracilis gty slender and much branched. The 



Pink leaves linear or linear lance-shaped, the 



uppermost almost threadlike. The ex- 

 ceedingly narrow lobes of the calyx equal in length the 



354 



